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Hat Trick
Letter
Jim
Willie CB is the editor of the “HAT TRICK LETTER”
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Mythology
is powerful. Just a few thousand years ago, men would go to war over
strange beliefs about gods and goddesses, or make decisions of state, or
act upon the fate of cities and hamlets, or enter into big trade
agreements, or embark on grand voyages, or agree to marriage, all after
consulting the oracles. They were the gurus of their day, replaced today
by economists from many corners. Budget advisors, brokerage analysts,
government spokesmen, and academic charlatans are the modern
soothsayers, hardly ever correct, always revered, never understood. It
seems whenever things are about to go badly, we face more economic myths
in the process of being shattered, and are soon subjected to new ones.
In their failed wake, we install more controlling (corrupting)
mechanisms like the Plunge Protection Team after crises like the 1987
Black Monday and the 2000 Tech Telecom bust.
Once
again the motive in promoting silly myths is the same, or at least the
nucleus motive is the same. Domestically, that is to deceive the hapless
ignorant hopeful public to continue to trust the leadership out of
Washington DC and New York City, to continue to remain invested in the
Wall Street game, to continue to participate in the consumption game, to
avoid a panic and head for exits before the losses mount. On the foreign
front, the motive is to encourage other nations to continue to send
their hard earned savings into the Great Black Hole that is the
USEconomy, to continue to supply and satisfy its desperate credit needs,
to continue to pay for the entry fee for selling in its vast
marketplace. The unspoken motive is to enable the aristocrats to
continue to churn their machinery, to ply their trade of exploiting the
great paper game, to further the squeeze on the middle class. In fact,
the middle class is the greatest loser from inflation’s impact and
heavy cost.
INFLATION
WRECKAGE
Inflation
has its hidden costs. Writers, analysts, and pundits catch the easy
victims, like savers who are robbed of the stored value from the drip
drip drip of erosion. Like small-time participants who shun the
opportunity to grow big. Rising wages, which at first seem like an
advantage from a steadily inflating economic system, have turned on the
masters of the inflationary machinery. Job outsourcing to Asia has
ripped the manufacturing foundation of the USEconomy clean off its
mooring and capstone, deprived it of legitimate wealth generation.
Consequently, the participants of our mfg-less society have been
deceived into believing that consumption within retail chains can stand
in its place. It offers the benefit of cleaner air, less sweat, and more
fun. What’s not to like? Let’s go shopping, the great medication for
the depressed. Instead of factories belching out smoke, noxious fumes,
and rendering its workers musclebound but with damaged bodies from
chemical intake, we have clean tidy shopping malls, nifty prevalent
consumer retail chains, really cool electronic stores, and nice smelling
furniture marts. Complimenting the networks of consumer havens are our
homes, the veritable piggy banks. Who needs to save anymore, so passé?
We have mutual funds and trading accounts. So we have suffered a deadly
transition from making products in an industrial setting, wherein added
value is gained from human labor with the aid of sophisticated machines.
We now stand with one foot in the financial credit spin cycle replete
with mortgages and car loans and vendor financed sales, not to mention
the world of stocks and bonds, and the other foot in the service collage
known to keep our devices and grounds in working order and looking
spiffy.
Is
this progress? No way! It is a tragedy in the making, fully denied. We
crossed the Rubicon ten years ago, maybe as long ago as the 1971 date.
At that time, we both abrogated the Bretton Woods gold standard for the
USDollar, and embraced the USGovt social & military contract. The
dual pact often called “Guns & Butter” committed to provide a
vast social safety net (despite claims we are not socialist) and to wage
war wherever we can. The Medicare plan is the latest socialist plan
passed under the current Administration is certain to worsen the
national bankruptcy condition, fully fingered by the St Louis Fed this
summer. So since 2001 we have a grand scheme identified by Nationalism &
Socialism, the former brandished proudly, the latter quietly engrained
more deeply, all against a backdrop of growing fear, withering civil
liberties, and wider war. My concept is that military actions
represent the ultimate in fixed business investment, although with as
much cleared paths for trade benefits on the positive side as global
backlash on the destructive side. Whereas the multiplier effect reaps
benefits in six to seven steps from trickle down in commerce, military
and defense spending reaps benefits mainly to the contractors in an
abrupt one to two steps as some degree of destruction results. On rare
occasion, military contract engineering has civilian benefits, however
far more being evident in NASA space research.
The
most reckless and irresponsible phase change has been the overdue
dependence within the USEconomy on the inflated equity of the entire
housing sector. Indeed it sustains the system to a great degree.
Americans have not saved actively since the mid-1990 decade, when
Greenspan endorsed irrational exuberance by warning about it, but
continuing to feed the destructive damaging condition. Several
years later, Greenspan actively shocked the world by claiming that gains
in home equity suddenly realized should be regarded as legitimate
wealth. This is unprecedented in the modern era for a central banker.
Worse still, in 2005 Greenspan added insult to injury by stating that “People who took on too much debt were desirous of financial harm.”
He urged the housing bubble stampede, then stepped out of its path on
political fallout. The central question should be “Will
the Greenspan legacy be directly linked to the upcoming crisis in
housing and the USEconomy, which is of his own making?” Given the
utterly imbecilic naïve confounded lack of comprehension of economic
matters, blame is likely to go to the current USFed Chairman Bernanke by
the present public and current leaders alike.
The
entire nation has been dumbed down on all matters economic, at least on
the macro level. The crisis will happen on Ben’s watch. It is not
preventable. Its pathogenesis was designed and laid out carelessly but
meticulously by Mr Greenspan. He split town to leave Bernanke with the
headache, and likely blame. Without a doubt, Ben was selected to become
the bagholder. Poor Ben has less charisma than Alan, perhaps equal
ability to explain and confuse, but he tragically has no more available
bubbles to engineer like Alan did. Housing is the last bubble. Well, to
be more clear, the commodity bull is the final bubble, but it is of a
cost nature.
CITATION
OF CURRENT MYTHS
The
present situation is overflowing with falsehoods, nonsensical beliefs,
indefensible notions being actively promoted when required. As they are
pressed into forefront usage, they are almost all discussed, analyzed,
and countered in my Hat Trick
Letter. There are so many current chapters to today’s mythology.
Several key heretical notions will be listed below, but not dismantled
here and now. Many beliefs have been discredited in public articles. The
latest monthly issues to the HTL and the upcoming September issue
(always published midmonth) address several listed myths at work, each
thoroughly invalid, untenable, and inexcusable, but each highly
important, each integral, each serving a key bonding purpose for the
system like band aids or chewing gum or bailing wire. It is
inconceivable to me how any sane, well educated, competent academic
Economics professor of repute could defend a single listed item. Yet the
great majority of this corrupted profession do precisely that, defend
and promote and carry on the great game. The corruption is of thought
process. An economic system dependent upon inflation requires the
associated cancerous defensive thought to complement the cancerous
policy itself. A certain level of cheerleading is also necessary to keep
the public bought in.
Almost
all current myths will soon unravel in tragic fashion. Do
not expect apologies when they do. Expect instead blame to be put on
speculators, blame to be put on the mortgage industry (maybe even Fanny
Mae & Freddie Mac), blame to be put on reckless consumers, blame to
be put on past administrations, blame to be put on Congress, blame to be
put on outsourcing corporations, blame to be put on the Chinese. Do not
expect much blame to be put on the high priests Greenspan or Samuelson
or Friedman. They are untouchable. Give better than 50-50 odds that
sufficient blame will be lodged on Bernanke, to the point that he might
be dismissed and shown the door before all monthly calendar pages of
2007 are turned.
Here
is a cornucopia of current crazy myths at work, the underpinnings for
each to unravel in tragic fashion. Steadfast belief in them would be
funny if not so tragic in doling out misery. The list could fill
volumes, but in the interest of time and space, only the major prominent
myths are cited. The authors and proponents to each myth should feel
shame, but they do not, at least not publicly. My guess is that
privately, they might offer derision and contempt for the public who
accepts their spun claptrap silly beliefs which hold the system together
and keeps the caste structure in place. This list is simply mindboggling.
-
No clear connection can be made
between a slump in the asset markets (primarily the stock market, but
also the housing sector) and an economic recession. In fact, the stock
link to slowdown was exhibited in 2001, whereas the housing link is
believed by sane experts to contain twice the impact on spending. Worse
still, an asset-based economy is undoubtedly the most risky and unstable
of all types, since inflation corrections threaten with deep recession.
-
A slower USEconomy will slow
demand for commodities, and thus cool down the commodity bull market,
including that for energy prices. In fact, demand is drawn from numerous
corners. Jobless still scamper around looking for work, and burn energy
in homes. All standing homes and offices and plants will use commodities
and energy. Businesses continue to hum with the majority of workers
still on the payroll. Foreign economies like Asia have a degree of
regional integrity and autonomy. And lastly, war consumes commodities
and energy at a great measure.
-
The consumer will hand off
responsibility for leadership within the USEconomy to the corporate
sector, as households yield to the business sector in the lead for
spending. In fact, if businesses forecast slower consumer demand, they
might cut back in supply, the other half of the price equation. A tapped
out consumer is not the candidate targeted by corporate outlays, which
are doing ok for now.
-
The housing sector can be
cooled down with higher interest rates, with an end to lax lending, and
less speculation, without an outright decline in housing, i.e. a bear
market. In fact, a vicious cycle has begun which is highly likely to be
worse than previous declines. As wild as gains were registered, as lax
as lending occurred, the reversal will be just as powerful and damaging.
What artificially rose will judiciously decline.
-
A rate cut by the US Federal
Reserve can stop any housing decline in its tracks. In fact, momentum
has a cold hand in itself to unwind which cannot be sustained. Lower
housing prices lead to new sellers, and the vicious cycle continues.
With 20% of all mortgages written in 2005 being with 0% down payment,
the march to negative equity is quick, often inducing a “for sale”
sign. With corrupted appraisals and home inspections came purchases
which should not have occurred. Those last two types will provide the
initial downward momentum in sales.
-
Higher interest rates are an
exercise in tightening of credit, reducing systemic debt. In fact, this
is an abuse of labels. Debt growth in the USEconomy has actually risen
by over 50% in the two years of rate hikes. That aint tightening. It
helps to check the data. Interest rates are indeed rising globally, but
money supply growth is too.
-
The inverted Treasury Yield
Curve no longer signals an economic recession. In fact, it still does,
even as it reflects something equally lethal. The hemorrhage that is the
US trade deficit comes back to subsidize our own federal debt load. This
represents an indirect monetization shot with a foreign abandonment risk
chaser.
-
The enormous growth in foreign
held US Treasury Bonds is not a problem, not in need of resolution,
since the owners are all trade partners. In fact, some of the biggest
creditors are not so friendly at all. China and Islamic nations are at
odds politically if not militarily with the United States. Russia has
become the spearhead to fracture the Petro-Dollar, enforced by their
military, a unique situation. Watch conflict with China and Russia rise
inexorably.
-
Gold is a commodity with no
yield payout, a dead asset. In fact, most growth assets pay no dividend,
like high flying tech stocks in the 1990 decade, like even Google today.
Ever heard of capital gains? Gold has risen from $265/oz in 2001 to over
$600 today, much like a growth stock. Dividends and yields pale by
comparison to capital gain.
-
The oil cost can be neutralized
and monetized via inflation, as in printed money, without harm. In fact,
with China in the picture, higher wages are not occurring. New money
injected into the system is more likely to chase commodity assets such
as energy, than to build new plants with new workers, or offer higher
paid current workers. Energy investments are excellent hedges against
both monetary inflation and geopolitical risk.
-
Speculation demand has kept
energy prices high for three years. In fact, a war premium has proven
justified, given all the violence, bandit actions, contract dishonor,
supply disruptions, and geopolitical strains. A global war for energy,
pursuing security of supply is perhaps the central motive for the Iraqi
War. With war comes inherent risk, and speculators have been eager to
bid up the risk premium, since it is real.
-
The USEconomy is the engine of
growth for the world system. In fact, an engine would pay for its bills
rather than issue increasingly worthless IOU’s in return. A credible
argument can be made that the US is actually a parasite on the global
economy, or a debtor green bourgeois which brandishes bountiful weapons.
-
The USEconomy is stronger than
that of the European Union. In fact, Europe has not fostered a deep
dependence on inflated housing assets, not drawn home equity in the
process, and not spent recklessly. The EU bilateral trade surplus with
the USEconomy has run between $9 and $12 per month for the last two
years. Europe does not lie about almost every conceivable economic
statistic, like the US does.
-
A devalued USDollar will
eventually remedy the US trade deficit. And conversely, an upgrade in
the Chinese yuan currency valuation will assist in the same remedy. In
fact, the US trade deficit is structural. It cannot be fixed in any
meaningful manner without a return of the manufacturing sector to US
shores. Let me know when that occurs. Distress in the carmaker sector
should provide a good forward indicator for actual solution. A lower
USDollar since 2001 has gone hand in hand with record setting trade
deficits, a forecast of mine in 2003, which was met with mockery to me
in direct emails and phone conversations.
-
Productivity has created
profits, with benefits reaped by corporations and households alike. In
fact, one should direct attention to where the direct investment has
taken place. It is in Asia. So the benefits have largely gone to Asian
economies, corporations, and households, as their economic strength has
markedly increased, and their standard of living has risen markedly. US
wages have fallen three years in a row. Outsourcing and equipment
deployment result in shed workers.
-
The military industrial complex
works to keep the nation safe, even financially. In fact, inefficiency
and chronic costly military adventures have been the outcome. Add to the
mix the erosion in representative government mechanisms, whereby
lobbyists have greater access to legislators than constituents. Defense
contractors have profited greatly, decade after decade. Cost overruns,
waste, fraud, and ineffective weapon systems are commonplace. Wars like
Vietnam and Iraq and Afghanistan might have secretive motives. They
surely add to the national federal debt, with uncertain benefit.
-
The Iraqi War will pay for
itself. In fact, this was more political hokum than myth, but surely
worthy of mention in this parade of charades. The civil war rages, fully
denied, a common trait of myths. Now $300 billion spent, with 50 Iraqis
being killed per day, the shock & awe is on its failure. How loudly
to the contrary must its status quo go before failure is admitted?
-
It will result in a “Soft
Landing” this time, whatever “it” is. In fact, we have never
experienced a soft landing in any claimed area in three decades, no
exception. Like with denied alcoholism, a prevalent usage of the term or
engagement of the question indicate the present condition, imminent
occurrence of the opposite. The more we hear of “Soft Landing,” the
more closely the contrary takes root.
-
Job growth continues. In fact,
the August Jobs Report cited 128 thousand new jobs today, but it relied
a bit much on the fantasy known as the Birth-Death model. The
convenient fallacious B-D model provided 121 thousand of those jobs.
That is right, 94.5% of the new jobs were from a suspicious indefensible
model directly out of a mythology book, but without pictures. See the “Anatomy
of Jobs Fraud” from last week.
-
The casino gambling gaming
sector contributes to the USEconomy. In fact, it is as productive as any
other addiction such as drinking, smoking, or narcotic drugs. The
benefits are superficial and fleeting, while the costs are staggering,
ongoing, and cause widespread wreckage. Let’s not overlook the misery.
-
To lose weight, just join a
diet plan. In fact, it takes work, sweat, discipline, and energy. Too
many people jump from one diet plan to another, deceiving themselves,
wasting money and time. Try exercising steadily and changing bad eating
habits. French fries and burgers, be gone!
-
Good hitting overcomes bad
pitching in Major League Baseball. In fact, pitching is of paramount
importance. Case in study should be the implosion of the Boston Red Sox,
stacked with great hitters. May their 2006 season rest in peace.
ONE
PAST EXAMPLE & A KUDO
A
walk through recent history was provided in a past article entitled “Economic
Mythology” in Sept 2004. In it a sequence of pathological belief
systems was described, one with the Reagan Administration, another with
the Clinton Admin, and the current chapter with the Bush II Admin. To be
fair, the Clinton and Bush II myth chapters were written by Greenspan,
who deserves full attribution, credit, and responsibility as the system
unravels. The Reagan chapter had chief authors in David Stockman, Art
Laffer, and others who attempted to put to practice theories of Nobel
Prize Winner Paul Samuelson. Yes, even our icon prize winners are party
to the colossal charade. Although not a complete portrayal of
nonsensical notions, the above article at least offered a broad review.
More specifically, it made a basic description of something so
extraordinarily silly on its face, that it must be pulled out once more,
if for no other reason than for a good laff (sic). In it was said two
years ago:
The
Laffer Curve expects higher tax revenue from higher tax rates in a
direct response with no reaction. It also expects higher tax revenue
from much lower tax rates in an exercise in powerful elasticity. In
other words, tax collection receipts benefit regardless, have the cake
and eat it too. How incredibly silly, but widely accepted. Budget
Director David Stockman was a certain charlatan, as he sold the idea,
later changed his numbers, but Reagan used an erroneous numbers anyway
in an historically hilarious Keystone Cop event.
This
week, a highly unusual debate took place on CNBC which elicited both
laughter and dismay by me. It was between Peter Schiff of Euro Pacific
Capital and Art Laffer, the charlatan who penned the absurd “Laffable
Curve.” Heck, the Laffer Curve is even more boldly ridiculous than the
Phillips Curve, which attempted to tie a given threshold level of
unemployment with price inflation. After viewing that five minute
interview on Monday afternoon, I wrote Peter a brief email, moved to the
point of feeling compelled. We have exchanged emails in brief fashion in
the past. He has been the source of some admiration for several months,
as he has taken on numerous financial sector conventional team players.
During these snapshot televised debates, he has managed to embarrass
each and every one of his legless opponents. The funny part is that his
forensic adversaries actually seem to believe their absurdities, unaware
of their embarrassment. My eyes have seen numerous such interviews, where opponent points
bordered on psychotic, like gigantic foreign trade deficits do not
matter, like using borrowed home equity to sustain a heavy consumer
lifestyle is not destructive, like an economy founded upon consumption
and reliant upon assets without industry is healthy, like inflated
homestead worth (home equity) is legitimate wealth, like flexibly funded
growing government deficits are not in need of remedy, and like growing
foreign debt holdings are not a threat. In my brief email, a well
deserved compliment was handed to Peter, along with a slam insult of
Laffer who was way way over the top in his arrogant mocking manner, even
laughing at Peter with unvarnished condescension, even offering to bet
him on future outcomes. Hey, I enjoy taking my shots when the time is
right. My note was simple and to the point:
After
witnessing that 5 minute interview debate today on Monday afternoon on
CNBC, I have concluded Art Laffer is without question the dumbest
(expletive) primate I have laid eyes on in several years. No need to
itemize his stupid comments, since his entire viewpoint was moronic,
delusional, heretical, off-base, condescending, lunatic, illogical. You
did very well, making your major fundamental points, the consistently
made ones. You also showed tact in not reminding him of the Laffer Curve
chapter of mythology. At some point, you might look foolish even
debating such a truly lost hack like him.
©
2006 Jim Willie, CB
Editorial
Archive
Jim
Willie CB is a statistical analyst in marketing research and retail
forecasting. He holds a Ph.D. in
Statistics. His career has
stretched over 24 years. He
aspires to thrive in the financial editor world, unencumbered by the
limitations of economic credentials.
Visit his free website to find articles from topflight authors at
www.GoldenJackass.com.
For personal questions about subscriptions, contact him
at “JimWillieCB@aol.com”
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